I have a stack of ideas about meaty concerns that often come
to my mind.
For example,
Though I lean toward the “progressive” end of the spectrum,
I worry that “My Team” does not, when it comes to its philosophical adversaries,
live up to its “Kumbaya” side of the bargain.
My line about that is,
(Note: This
idea, though in loftier form, appeared recently in the New York Times, where columnist Nicholas Kristoff wrote, concerning
the attack on a college law school professor for defending a disreputable
client, “… while I admire campus activism for its commitment to social justice,
I sometimes worry that it becomes infused with a prickly intolerance, embracing
every kind of diversity but one kind: ideological
diversity.”)
The fact that I collect such serious ideas says they are
important to me.
The fact that they remain on the
stack says I do not know how to write
them. (At least not in “readable
fashion.”)
Reminding me of a song lyric I once wrote, that went:
“Whatever plan you’ve
got,
You can’t be what
you’re not.”
Fortunately, I have an affinity for “small stories.” Which, thankfully, also come to my mind.
MEATIER STORIES: “What are you doing here?”
SMALL STORIES: “Getting
written, Smart Guy.”
The anniversary of my once-in-a-lifetime Oxford Experience sent this memorable
moment floating back to my consciousness.
And I happpily welcome its return.
Wednesday July 11, 2018. (I looked it up.) Which is also stepdaughter Rachel’s
birthday. (Which I did not have to look up.) England is playing Croatia in the soccer World Cup Semi-Finals in Moscow, the
winner advancing to the championship game.
This is a huge deal for England, who has not won the World Cup since 1966. (Which I also
did not have to look up, since I lived in London in 1967 and they were still talking
about it.) (Along with winning the
“Eurovision Song Contest” the same year.)
After finishing dinner in “The Great Hall” (where they
filmed Harry Potter scenes), we came
out of the dining room, and there, perched conspicuously – and
uncharacteristically – on the wall of the foyer was a big-screen TV, broadcasting
the monumental soccer game, already in progress.
Some of the “visitors” (none that I met, English) – gathered
to watch, more curious than passionately involved. The game was close. (Croatia eventually won 2-1, with England
ahead, 1-0 at halftime.)
As I watched, my eyes turned back to “The Great Hall”,
seeing the college’s “Wait Staff” clearing the tables and “setting up” for
tomorrow’s breakfast. It was a somewhat
heartbreaking tableau. You could tell by
their body language, they wanted to be out in the foyer, their eager ears “leaning”
intently towards the nearby tantalizing TV.
That’s when it came to me.
Why didn’t a brigade of “visitors” offer to help the college’s
“Wait People”, so they could finish up faster and then go watch the game?
Wouldn’t that be something?
“Strangers to the Rescue”, so the real
fans could enjoy the history-making event?
The “Wait Staff” would have probably said “No.”
Ah, but the gesture.
“The Glorious Gesture!”
(As it would be remembered for years to come.)
I feel the shimmering echo of a scene from one of my
favorite movies, The Last Holiday – the
one with Sir Alec Guinness, not Queen
Latifah – in which the guests at a posh beachside resort pitch in in the
kitchen, after the hotel’s disgruntled employees solemnly go out on strike. (I do not know if that “democratizing” scene
was included in the “remake.” I was
unwilling to watch it. Only partly because I wanted to remake The Last
Holiday and someone with “clout” beat me to the punch.)
“Pitching in” here
would be just like the movie.
Only real.
Except it did not happen.
I am a “thinker”, not a doer. I am no “Leader of Strangers.” Or people I know, for that matter. (With the single exception of leading a work
stoppage of toy wrappers and Harrods.) The idea came to me. But that’s as far as it went.
Still, I fantasize heroically leaping into the fray. Though, being me, not entirely successfully.
IRATE WAITPERSON: “Not like that! ‘Oy, are you trying to help us, or bleedin’
slow the job down?”
What I just did, I guess, is kind of what fiction is about –
telling stories that didn’t happen, while pretending they did.
I did the same thing.
But without the pretending.
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